<http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSISL2673220070514?src=051407_1258_TOPSTORY_strike_shuts_down_pakistani_cities>
Pakistani cities virtually shut down by strike
Mon May 14, 2007 10:06PM EDT
By Kamran Haider

KARACHI (Reuters) - A Pakistani opposition strike virtually shut down
Karachi and other major cities on Monday after nearly 40 people were
killed and about 150 wounded in Pakistan's worst political street
violence in two decades.

Authorities banned demonstrations in Karachi and declared a public
holiday across Sindh province after the weekend violence in the city,
which began when Pakistan's suspended top judge tried to meet
supporters.

The government has authorized paramilitary troops to shoot anyone
involved in serious violence in Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city,
which has a history of bloody feuding between ethnic-based factions.

City police chief Azhar Farooqi said security forces had stepped up
patrols and the situation was under control. There was no violence on
Monday though the city was tense.

"The city is totally paralyzed. Shops are closed and very little
public transport is on the roads. People are scared," Farooqi told
Reuters.

Government attempts to remove Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry over
unspecified accusations of misconduct leveled on March 9 have outraged
the judiciary and the opposition.

The judicial crisis has snowballed into a campaign against President
Pervez Musharraf and is the most serious challenge to the authority of
the president, who is also army chief, since he seized power in 1999.

The opposition strike, called to protest against the violence, saw
shops and markets closed in all major cities including Karachi,
Lahore, Peshawar, Rawalpindi and Quetta.

It was the first time since Musharraf took power that a strike call
had been so widely observed.

While stirring opposition to Musharraf, the violence in Karachi has
also raised the specter of bloody feuding that plagued the city in the
1980s and 1990s.

The opposition blames the government and the pro-government Muttahida
Qaumi Movement (MQM), which runs Karachi, for the violence. Musharraf
said Chaudhry ignored appeals not to visit the city.

In Islamabad, opposition politicians stormed out of parliament
shouting "the general is a killer," referring to Musharraf, and "MQM
is a killer."

A Supreme Court hearing into a petition by Chaudhry against an inquiry
into the misconduct accusations was due to begin on Monday but was put
off for a day.

Musharraf has called for the courts to be allowed to settle the case
and has criticized lawyers for politicizing it. He has also ruled out
a state of emergency and said elections due late in the year would go
ahead.

COURT OFFICIAL KILLED

In another twist to the escalating crisis, gunmen shot dead a Supreme
Court official who Chaudhry's lawyers said was a witness in the case.
Police said they did not know why the official was shot. Relatives
said it was a targeted killing.

The leader of an Islamist opposition alliance petitioned the Supreme
Court calling for Musharraf's removal as president and army chief as
he had violated his oath by taking part in politics while in uniform
and for "dragging the army into politics."

Musharraf promised to quit as army chief by the end of 2004 but backed
out of the commitment. Constitutionally, he is due to give up his army
post by the end of December but he is believed to be reluctant to do
so.

Analysts have speculated Musharraf's motive for seeking to oust
Chaudhry was aimed at removing a possible obstacle should his plans
for re-election run into constitutional challenges.

In Karachi, the commander of paramilitary forces said the priority for
his 13,000 men was averting ethnic strife.

Most of those killed when gunmen took over the streets were opposition
supporters, including ethnic Pashtuns. Their MQM rivals are mostly the
descendants of migrants from India.

(Additional reporting by Faisal Aziz in KARACHI and Zeeshan Haider in ISLAMABAD)
--
Yoshie

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